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Are Ex-Library Books Worth Anything?

The honest answer about ex-library books. Most have minimal resale value. But there are exceptions — here's when to sell, donate, or recycle them.

Short answer: ex-library books usually aren't worth much. Most lose 70–90% of collectible value the moment a library stamps them. But “not much” isn't “nothing” — and a few categories of ex-library books are still worth selling.

Why Collectors Don't Want Ex-Library Books

Library books have markers that can't be removed without damaging the book further:

  • Property stamps — often on the title page, copyright page, and page edges.
  • Barcode stickers — usually on the cover and spine.
  • Card pockets and due-date slips — pasted inside the back cover.
  • Call number stickers — on the spine.
  • Mylar dust jacket protectors — glued to the book (often permanent).
  • “WITHDRAWN” or “DISCARD” stamps — a death sentence for collector value.

Book collectors value pristine originals. Library markings are permanent, visible evidence of heavy use. For most collectible titles, an ex-library copy is worth 10–30% of a clean copy.

When Ex-Library Books Are Still Worth Selling

There are specific cases where ex-library copies retain value:

Extremely Rare Books

If a book is rare enough that clean copies are almost impossible to find — think genuinely scarce 19th-century imprints — an ex-library copy may still have real value. A Victorian-era exploration account with library stamps can be worth $100 where a pristine copy would be worth $500.

Reference and Scholarly Books

Medical, engineering, and legal reference books get bought for their content, not their collectibility. Libraries often discard these when new editions come out, and the used-book market for them is healthy. Current-edition STEM textbooks — even ex-library — are actively bought.

Niche Specialty Books

Out-of-print technical books, obscure regional histories, and specialized monographs sell on content. Ex-library versions of these often sell for 50–80% of clean copies.

Content-Focused Readers

Thriftbooks, AbeBooks sellers, and used-book markets all handle ex-library copies. They sell at lower prices but they do sell.

When Ex-Library Books Aren't Worth Selling

  • Common fiction — plenty of clean copies available. Market price near zero.
  • Bestsellers from the last 10 years — no collector premium, and ex-library just means “used hardcover” in a saturated market.
  • Book club editions that were also ex-library — double-whammy. Essentially unsellable.
  • Heavily worn ex-library books — library + wear = recycling.

Our Approach at SellBooksABQ

We rarely buy ex-library copies of common fiction or common nonfiction. We do buy ex-library STEM textbooks (current editions), ex-library art and photography monographs in good condition, and ex-library copies of genuinely scarce material. If you have a mix, bring it all — we'll sort.

Best Option for Most Ex-Library Books

Donate to organizations that accept them: the New Mexico Literacy Project, Goodwill, Better World Books, or your local library's Friends-of-the-Library book sale. They'll find a good home, and you get a tax deduction receipt for the donation.

Ready to get a quote?

Free evaluation. Honest prices. No pressure. Books we don't buy go to the New Mexico Literacy Project — not a registered non-profit or a charity, just the literacy side of what we do.

Call or Text 702-496-4214 Get a free quote
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Don't Want to Sell? Donate Instead.

Books I can't pay cash for — or that you'd rather just give away — get donated right here through the New Mexico Literacy Project. Same warehouse, free 24/7 drop-off, or I'll pick up for you. Nothing to the landfill.

Donate Instead →

Not sure? Read "Should I Sell or Donate My Books?" — the honest answer →